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The main thrust behind this category re-positioning is coming from Asia. Volumes here are predicted to rise by around 16 percent in this year alone; that is more than twice the global rate of increase. Yet, the region already absorbs one in every three liters of packaged water consumed around the world. But per capita intake remains well below the international average, especially in under-developed markets like Pakistan, the Philippines and Vietnam where it is still less than ten liters per capita. This underlines the huge market potential still to be released in this part of the world.
Asian growth has a strong dependency on China where major suppliers like the Blue Sword Group, China Resources Enterprises, Coca-Cola and Zhejiang Nongfushanquan Water Co are helping to drive expansion. But, as well as the Chinese market being huge, it also remains fragmented. Despite a combined volume in the order of seven billion liters, these four players are responsible for less than a third of category sales. Yet, whilst China represents the cornerstone of Asian packaged water consumption, Canadean can reveal that it is India that is seeing the more dynamic advances, at well over 20 percent a year.
The North American packaged water market is also huge with sales now in excess of 30 billion liters, but the pace of development is far less vibrant than in Asia. Volumes suffered here during the recessionary years and took time to recover; but the rate of annual growth is now re-accelerating. Recent progress has been partly driven by packaged water’s improved value offering, with consumers switching from other beverages where prices have risen more steeply.
At the same time, the category has benefited from its intrinsic low calorie proposition relative to alternative mainstream soft drinks. However, conditions remain very challenging as a combination of relatively low growth and wafer thin profit margins make it hard for suppliers to commit to long-term investment in brand support. This is not seen to deter future volume expansion.